학술논문

Cervical Cancer Stages, Human Papillomavirus Integration, and Malignant Genetic Mutations: Integrative Analysis of Datasets from Four Different Cohorts.
Document Type
Article
Source
Cancers. Dec2023, Vol. 15 Issue 23, p5595. 12p.
Subject
*GENETIC mutation
*METASTASIS
*TUMOR classification
*PAPILLOMAVIRUS diseases
*RESEARCH funding
*LONGITUDINAL method
CERVIX uteri tumors
Language
ISSN
2072-6694
Abstract
Simple Summary: This study provides a thorough examination of various aspects of cervical cancer, using clinical and molecular datasets from four cohorts of patients across four continents. This integrative analysis explores the relationships between cervical cancer stages, productive human papillomavirus (HPV) integration, and the resulting malignant genetic mutations. The clinical data showed that cervical cancer and its stages were positively correlated with high-risk HPV infection and integration. At the molecular level, biological processes related to HPV infection, cancer-related conditions, and viral carcinogenesis were associated with the most significantly enriched pathways. The clinical and molecular findings further establish the prominent role of HPV infection and integration leading to genetic mutation underpinning cervical cancer and its stages across cohorts of different races and regions. Cervical cancer represents a significant global health concern, stemming from persistent infections with high-risk types of human papillomavirus (HPV). The understanding of cervical cancer's clinical correlates, risk factors, molecular mechanisms, stages, and associated genetic mutations is important for early detection and improved treatment strategies. Through integrated analysis of clinical and molecular datasets, this study aims to identify key factors that are overlapping and distinct across four cohorts of different races and regions. Here, datasets from four distinct cohorts of patients from Uganda (N = 212), the United States of America (USA) (N = 228), China (N = 106), and Venezuela (N = 858) were examined to comprehensively explore the relationships between cervical cancer stages, HPV types (clades), productive HPV integration, and malignant genetic mutations. Cohort-specific findings included the occurrence frequencies of cervical cancer stages and grades. The majority of patients from the USA and China were diagnosed with stages I and II, while those from Uganda were diagnosed with stages II and III, reflecting levels of awareness and the availability of HPV vaccines and screening services. Conversely, cervical cancer and its stages were positively correlated with HPV types (clades), HPV integration, and risk-factor habits across the cohorts. Our findings indicate that the more common squamous cervical cancer can be potentially due to productive HPV16 (clade 9) integration. At the molecular level, pathways related to HPV infection, cancer-related conditions, and viral carcinogenesis were among the most significant pathways associated with mutated genes in cervical cancer (across cohorts). These findings collectively corroborate the prominent role of HPV infection and integration leading to genetic mutation and hence to the development of cervical cancer and its stages across patients of distinct races and regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]